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The Voile Tractor Skins are splitboard-specific climbing skins designed to get you into the backcountry. The Voile Tractor Skins' bomber riveted stainless steel tip-loops take the abuse of ascending and ensure they stay securely on your board. Voile used the most tenacious glue and super grippy hydrophobic nylon mohair to keep you ascending into thin air. These extra-wide climbing skins come complete with a nylon bag and trim tool to make sure they fit any splitboard.
Bottom Line: Gitty-up. The incredible grip, slide, and durability of the Voile Tractor Skins will have your skier buddies bribing you to break trail.
so far so good i've owned them for one season. they were a little tricky to trim only because of the side cut of the splitboard. but the good news is you don't have to have a super clean cut line for them to work. these things rule for climbing. i only had to wax them one day towards the end of the season that was really wet and slushy.
the glue is super strong. use your knees to help pull them apart when transitioning.
and is it just me, or did the price go up this year like $50?
They have riveted, pre curved tips! That takes all the hassel out of fitting skins to a split. Spend 2 minutes on trimming and "voile" you have skins. Skins with bomber tip loops.
Do yourself a big favor and score the largest Black Diamond cheat sheets for stowing these mega-wide bad boys and you'll save yourself time and frustration during ski-board conversions. Gotta love the crazy glue-like tack on these aggressive climbers, but the effort and toll taken on the skins (glue transfer, excessive handling with gloves, etc.) just ain't worth it -- in fact, cheat sheets or the equivalent should be included standard by Voile. Otherwise, these skins are more than up to the task of setting or following fairly steep skin tracks when needed.
Just finished touring out of Chamonix ( France) on my home built split board and these skins, both worked like a dream. The skins feel grippy, slide and climb well. Take the time to trim them properly - have a good look at the instructions and make sure you leave a reasonable space by the edges of the board. Get 'em and get out there.
Another great Voile product and the only option available for your wide splitboard ski designed and shaped to fit on the board half. Skin hair is super tough and cleans up tree sap, etc well. The glue used to hold the skin to your base is very sticky, and can be tough to seperate. I purchased some rubber/beaded drawer liner material from the hardware store and cut it just over the width of the skin (after you have trimmed it). Cut 2 pieces and place on each skin. Or if you are a ultralight packer, use only one and place inbetween each skin. Make sure to make it a little wider then your skin so you don't have to be so exact in its placement.
These skins have always worked well for me. However, I don't have anything to compare them to. I was concerned at first about the tails pulling up and getting snow underneath. So far, that hasn't proven true, but I also haven't used them in heavy wet snow yet. Like others have mentioned, they can be awful to pull apart in very cold temps. I typically put them inside my jacket on the descent to keep the glue more pliable. They are very powerful, the name is spot on, you can ascend very aggressive climbs. Make sure you trim them back from the edge far enough to get a solid hold on icy traverses.
Why do the skins only extend the running length of the board, rather than all the way up the tail. The Voile kit specifies they should only run this far too - can anyone tell me why?
you don't need any more surface area than that you make up for it in the width of the skins. these things'll get you up where you need them to. plus, any more length is just that much more skin to pull apart (ie. more strength, more time, more space to store, etc.).
well i had purchased at a higher price (silly me) these things are fat. i got a bd cheat sheet cause i've heard about the bonding of glue on glue, like the others they almost run the length of my 58 split therefore looking to find a tail solution. mabye the plastic ones on the voile site with a metal reinforcement. Yet to use the setup at all, although its all made in the USA, so you gotta feel good about that. GOOD DEAL this is what these should be selling for.
These split board skins are the way to explore the backcountry. Their grip is incredible, in fact, if I take an aggressive up hill skin track, my ski buddies begin to slip and slide, wasting energy here and there. The grip is very strong, making for a solid, energy saving step. Get your board off your back and get out there.
I was a little worried the skins did not include a tail clip. Boy was I wrong. They have some of the stickiest glue ever. I never even worried about them coming off my board. They tackled some serious verticle without having to make switchbacks. And even a little wet, they worked without hesitation. Do I recommend them? Of course. Work for your turns. Besides the splitboard, best investment I have made in a long time.
For a splitboard? These are your only options to cover the entire board. You can experiment and trim then down, but you might only be saving a few grams - oz.
They work great. They make ascent on a "Split Decision" a breeze, easily outperforming snow-shoes in fresh, virgin snow (the only use I've had from the skins so far). The extremely sticky glue makes them tricky to handle when changing between board and ski mode (and pulled the excess epoxy (that I should have sanded away) right off the bottom of the home-built split board I made using the Voile Split Kit.
These skins are great. They have great climbing ability. They only real downside is no tail piece. They are fine for one or two laps, but if you are doing multiple climbs the skins do not stay. There is a reason skins for skis have a tail piece. Voile should offer tail piece for these as well.
Well I opened the package and said, "What? All this money for some carpet with glue?" But on the snow they grip very well, very impressed. The trimming tool is much more useful than it looks.
Hello,I am using a splitboard since three years. Everything works fine, but the skins. They are voile splitboard skins which were delivered with my prior khyber board. I hardly can climb without crampons - at moderately steep ascents on a hard, slightly frozen surface I have no sufficient traction. Can anyone recommend me better skins? Or am I just too lightweight (50 kilos)?Cheers,Genia
I've got a Burton 165 split board and use the really wide and as long BD skins. It takes some customizing but the work and I've never had any slipage problems.
It might be as simple as where your feet are placed during skinning. Ultimately the hair on the skins doesn't grip to icey surfaces, it needs the breakup of snow to allow the hairs to stand perpendicular to the ski.
These work surprisingly well except for a couple of shortcomings that I can see. They are truly a bastard to pull apart (as are most skins). But that comes with the territory. I wish they were made for each size of split board, instead of just two sizes that are too short on purpose. Also a clippable tail would be a cool addition, too. Other than that they work really well.
Just finished an epic three day assault on numerous unopened ski trails in North Central Vermont after receiving 30+ inches of super low density snow last weekend. Trailbreaking was absurdly difficult for many skiers, even w/ super fat skis and skins, but splitboard and tractor skins floated best by far. Got nominated to break trail most of the time. Nonetheless, have toured w/ these in Utah, Alaska and much of New England, and work extremely well in powder and variable conditions. New riveted tip clip much better than old stitching and fabric. Adding a tail clip would be nice, but no huge problem. Being 110mm wide, they are wicked sticky but seem to be more manageable the more you use them. Carry some extra glue and get out there.
I'm going to make my own splitboard useing the Voile Split Decision Kit. Can I use these skins for my powder board or is there another type of skin i need to get?
i recently made a split board as well, and the first pair of skins i bought for it were wide ski skins. the problem with using a ski skin is that the clip that goes over the tip is straight, where as the clip on the voile skin is angled to fit a split board much better. plus the volie skin is much wider than any ski skin i could find, so you don't have the annoying gaps on either side of your skin.
Yeah, the others will make you break trail, but be careful; some of the "skinnier" members of your party will blow out if you go too steep. BD "cheat sheets" are a MUST to get these things apart in anything but the coldest temperatures. My wife loves me again after I got her a set.
The "Cheat Sheets" by black diamond are a must for skins. I skinned to the summit of James Peak (13,249 ft). The splitboard is absolutely great, but the hardest workout of the day was pulling the skins apart. Once I bought the cheat sheets, it made pulling them apart a ton easier and I became envy of all my skier friends.
This is only my second pair of skins, so I'm hardly an expert. And, since both pairs are Tractor Skins, I've nothing to compare them to. However, and it's a big however, it is worth noting that there appears to a substantial difference the two, otherwise almost-identical, sets of skins: Grippiness (Sorry. As a backcountry knuckle dragger, my vocabulary is embarrassingly void of ski-centric technological terminology). In short, these new skins appear to grip MUCH better than the old onesold" being a relative term, since the old ones have been used maybe a dozen times, and most of those have been in brand-spanking-new Wasatch backcountry powder. So, anyway, I'm not sure if this "review" makes much of a difference, except to the two or three other split-boarders out there (if there are indeed any other split boarders out there). Since we already have skins and probably can't afford new onesand if we can, we're probably on the verge of divorce and one more "discretionary" (toy) purchase will be that last strawwe probably won't be purchasing anything new, anytime soon, anyhow. But I digress. Seriously, these puppies appear to have some sort of anti-gravity stick-to-it-iveness about them; because it really seems I have to make a conscious efforton anything but solid iceto use the worst form I can possibly manage (leaning WAY forward, poles willy nilly, etc.) in order to get these skins to let go. Meanwhile my poor son is extricating his twisted limbs from his split boards and the tree limbs after his last slip/slide/tumble...on my old skins. So, there you have it, albeit from a relative newcomer to the world of skinning. Two thumbs up.
Killer skins brought me up some steep and deep in the Turnagain Pass Area, AK for some epic runs with great friends. Super sticky glue will give you a workout.
System was fit well for split board. A little trimming and your ready to go. Could have another attachment method at the rear, but all in all product works well.
The Voile Tractor Skin for the Split decision makes it simple to fit to your split board. These were much easier to do than the Black Diamond ones that I was using. Good quality and work well.
Things needed to make these awesome. Tail clips/voile straps to keep the tail on. Cheat sheets from Black Diamond. Just remember when trimming to leave some space so your edges are still useful.
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